The Achievement of University Access: Conversion Factors, Capabilities and Choices

In the light both of persistent inequality of education opportunities for low income families and a wide equality gap in South Africa, this article explores students’ university access by applying Amartya Sen’s capability approach to a South African case study. The article demonstrates empirically t...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Melanie Walker
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Cogitatio 2019-01-01
Series:Social Inclusion
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.cogitatiopress.com/socialinclusion/article/view/1615
id doaj-fbd9596c67864f24bb5529797a49b92b
record_format Article
spelling doaj-fbd9596c67864f24bb5529797a49b92b2020-11-25T00:26:08ZengCogitatioSocial Inclusion2183-28032019-01-0171526010.17645/si.v7i1.1615920The Achievement of University Access: Conversion Factors, Capabilities and ChoicesMelanie Walker0SARCHI Chair in Higher Education & Human Development Research Programme, University of the Free State, South AfricaIn the light both of persistent inequality of education opportunities for low income families and a wide equality gap in South Africa, this article explores students’ university access by applying Amartya Sen’s capability approach to a South African case study. The article demonstrates empirically that access is more than an individual project, shaped both by objective conditions and subjective biographies, that is by general conversion factors and a person’s social and personal options. Key conversion factors are material (income) and social (family, community, school, information), which produce an interlocking system of opportunity. Access thus requires more than formal opportunity to enable social mobility for all. The case study comprises qualitative interviews with diverse students in their first year at one university; illustrative narratives are selected to show different pathways, conversion factors and choices. Agency and self-efficacy emerge as especially important for making choices but also for constructing a higher education pathway where none exists for that person and her family. The article suggests that higher education has the potential to advance social mobility provided that it moves in the direction of expanding the capabilities of all students to have the choice of higher education.https://www.cogitatiopress.com/socialinclusion/article/view/1615capability approachfair accessSouth Africauniversity
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Melanie Walker
spellingShingle Melanie Walker
The Achievement of University Access: Conversion Factors, Capabilities and Choices
Social Inclusion
capability approach
fair access
South Africa
university
author_facet Melanie Walker
author_sort Melanie Walker
title The Achievement of University Access: Conversion Factors, Capabilities and Choices
title_short The Achievement of University Access: Conversion Factors, Capabilities and Choices
title_full The Achievement of University Access: Conversion Factors, Capabilities and Choices
title_fullStr The Achievement of University Access: Conversion Factors, Capabilities and Choices
title_full_unstemmed The Achievement of University Access: Conversion Factors, Capabilities and Choices
title_sort achievement of university access: conversion factors, capabilities and choices
publisher Cogitatio
series Social Inclusion
issn 2183-2803
publishDate 2019-01-01
description In the light both of persistent inequality of education opportunities for low income families and a wide equality gap in South Africa, this article explores students’ university access by applying Amartya Sen’s capability approach to a South African case study. The article demonstrates empirically that access is more than an individual project, shaped both by objective conditions and subjective biographies, that is by general conversion factors and a person’s social and personal options. Key conversion factors are material (income) and social (family, community, school, information), which produce an interlocking system of opportunity. Access thus requires more than formal opportunity to enable social mobility for all. The case study comprises qualitative interviews with diverse students in their first year at one university; illustrative narratives are selected to show different pathways, conversion factors and choices. Agency and self-efficacy emerge as especially important for making choices but also for constructing a higher education pathway where none exists for that person and her family. The article suggests that higher education has the potential to advance social mobility provided that it moves in the direction of expanding the capabilities of all students to have the choice of higher education.
topic capability approach
fair access
South Africa
university
url https://www.cogitatiopress.com/socialinclusion/article/view/1615
work_keys_str_mv AT melaniewalker theachievementofuniversityaccessconversionfactorscapabilitiesandchoices
AT melaniewalker achievementofuniversityaccessconversionfactorscapabilitiesandchoices
_version_ 1725345764031332352